Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | swarnie_'s commentslogin

You've had the vaccine for longer then almost anyone, what's happening?


The vaccine does unfortunately not work as well as hoped for in the case of the delta variant + a lot of people are still unvaccinated and delta is much more infectious. Cases and hospitalisations are also up in Israel https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-m.... Here is a corresponding news item in Science: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/08/grim-warning-israel-.... It also suggests that the protection against hospitalisation of the vaccine is not as good as it was hoped for among older people. From the publicly available data for Israel you can estimate the vaccine efficacy against hospitalisations to be ~59% (relative risk reduction).


Statistics are hard to interpret correctly. See https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simpson%27s_paradox


Well it is easy to work it out yourself. Israelis >12 years are 78/22 vaccinated/not vaccinated. Among the hospitalised 59/41 are vaccinated/not vaccinated. So you have 59/78 = 0.756 and 41/22 = 1.864. Therefore the ratio of risks is 0.756/1.864 = 0.41. Which gives you 0.59 as I mentioned. I believe that is the same way the original efficacy of the vaccine was calculated in the first place. Admittedly I have a PhD in Physics not statistics, so I might be missing something :).


These calculations aren’t stratified by age / prior risk, so you can’t really infer the efficacy this simply.


The original statements of vaccine efficacy were also not stratified in that way, were they? With delta you arrive at ~39% relative risk reduction of preventing a positive PCR (instead of >95%) and ~59% relative risk reduction of preventing hospitalisation. That would also be true if you randomly drew people from the population and conducted a study, no? Of course it still can mean that your individual benefit is much higher.


> so I might be missing something

You're surely calculating a useful number, but it's not the "vaccine efficacy". Definition from the CDC website:

    Vaccine efficacy/effectiveness is interpreted as the proportionate reduction in disease among the vaccinated group. So a VE of 90% indicates a 90% reduction in disease occurrence among the vaccinated group, or a 90% reduction from the number of cases you would expect if they have not been vaccinated.
Your calculation looks at the number of hospitalised people not in the people who got the disease.

So, on a first glance it seems you're computing a useful number: how effective is the vaccine from preventing your to get hospitalised assuming that you would have been hospitalised if you caught covid. Surely that's a useful number, it just shouldn't be confused with the >90% vaccine efficacy number, which measures a different thing.

Now, I do also have some qualms with your calculation of the "hospitalisation prevention efficacy" rate.

Let me rewrite your calculation symbolically:

    "Israelis >12 years are v/(100-v) vaccinated/not vaccinated. Among the hospitalised h/(100-h) are vaccinated/not vaccinated. So you have h/v = x and (100-h)/(100-v) = y Therefore the ratio of risks is x/y = z. Which gives you (1-z) as I mentioned."

Let's make a little thought experiment. Let's imagine that 98% of people were vaccinated with a vaccine with 90% efficacy. Since the efficacy is not 100%, some people will still get the disease and some will still get hospitalised. Since very few people in this scenario are unvaccinated, most of the people who end up in hospitals will be vaccinated. Let's imagine that 50% of those who get the disease get hospitalised. Since only 10% of those vaccinated that get infected contract the disease, only 5% of the vaccinated population will get hospitalized. OTOH (in this scenario) 50% of the infected unvaccinated people get hospitalized, but since only 2% of the people are unvaccinated, this means only 1% of the infected unvaccinated population get hospitalized; 99% of the hospitalized people are thus vaccinated.

    v = 98
    h = 99

    "People from our scenario are 98/2 vaccinated/not vaccinated. Among the hospitalised 99/1 are vaccinated/not vaccinated. So you have 99/98 = 1.01 and 1/2 = 0.5 Therefore the ratio of risks is 1.01/0.5 = 2.02. Which gives you -1.02 as I mentioned."

That formula doesn't seem to make sense.


It does make sense from the numbers 99% of hospitalised vaccinated, 98% of the population vaccinated you should conclude that the vaccine increases the risk of hospitalisation. That is why the number comes out negative. It would be the same in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccine_efficacy if you swapped the numbers for vaccine / placebo. The number would come out negative if in a trial the vaccine worked worse than the placebo. In your scenario you confuse yourself by calculating with percentages, I think.


> you should conclude that the vaccine increases the risk of hospitalisation.

Not really. It just means that since in that scenario the vast majority of people are vaccinated the break-through cases (people who despite being vaccinated end up hospitalised) outnumbers the small percentage of unvaccinated people who end up hospitalised *despite* the fact that the vaccine efficacy rate remains constant.

I'm not sure if we're talking past each other, so let me take one step back and make another attempt:

I made an extreme example to make it easy to see. Let's make an even more extreme example without any numbers nor percentages:

Let's imagine that everyone, literally every single person in a population gets vaccinated. How many hospitalised people do you expect to see?

Since the vaccine is not perfect and some people get severely sick despite the vaccine, you'd expect to see some number of hospitalised people.

How many of those hospitalised people would be vaccinated?

Well, we just said that in this scenario everybody in the population has been vaccinated, thus everybody who got hospitalised is vaccinated!

Can we conclude that vaccines cause hospitalization? We clearly cannot conclude that from these numbers alone.

Can we agree on this before continuing to talk about which crucial metric we're ignoring in this discussion?


I'm honestly not sure, maybe we are really just talking past each other. If there are no unvaccinated people left the relative risk reduction would be zero, that just follows from the definition. The absolute number of hospitalisations would still be meaningful. In the perfect world that everyone was vaccinated you would still see an age dependent decrease of effectiveness over time and relative to alpha. The real data from Israel seems to show that two vaccine doses in a very compliant population are not enough to effectively prevent the number of cases, hospitalisations and deaths to rise without additional other measures (boosters, masks, etc.).


I'm not arguing against what data from Israel may show in general, I didn't go into that rabbit hole.

What I'm arguing is that the argument as presented in this thread cannot support this conclusion since they only focus on the vaccinated/non vaccinated ratio of hospitalised cases, which by definition goes up as more people get vaccinated. The effect is also compounded by a skewed distribution in favour of older people "getting severely sick" (and thus hospitalized) versus the general lower "getting sick" bar set to measure vaccine effectiveness.

This is a bit counterintuitive and makes for an easy topic for journalists to create a sensationalistic piece.

Unfortunately that's how most articles of the subject that I see cited look like. Perhaps there are better articles that make a stronger case, with all the relevant number (such as hospitalizations / infected people in general population). Can you share one if you know about it?


The israeli data has issues because it was during the initial surge of delta which was predominantly in cities with high vaccination rates, which drives the VE down if you compare it against the population-wide ratio of vaccinated to unvaccinated.

Most studies of VE also do statistical modelling of how many of the unvaccinated have been infected and are actually recovered. This was the case of the CDC study from yesterday which had the headline number of only 66% efficacy against delta, but if you dig into the data they didn't test for antibodies or anything but modeled viral spread and had a 95% CI on that number of 26% to 84%.

That is literally garbage data.

The actual value could be closer to the higher end due to them underestimating community spread (pretty plausible) and due to selection effects where their unvaccinated population was higher risk for prior infection than they thought.

I thought that study might change my mind on the situation since they had done a much better job than the Israeli data on controlling for age, comorbidities, etc. But when you get down to it the VE data was still crap. And the mention of waning immunity seemed to be just tacked on with no supporting evidence other than the lower number VE number against delta.

Similarly, its now been found that the studies which equated similar Ct values to viral load are bad because there's less culturable virus in vaccinated individuals, and the Ct values drop faster which indicates vaccinated individuals are producing more viral debris at peak Ct and clearing the virus faster. So they would therefore be expected to have less transmission. Since they're staying out of the hospital and Ct values correlate somewhat with symptom severity that also suggests less transmission (the people who wind up hospitalized most likely transmit more before they get there).

Then there's that silly study out of China which found the odd result that viral-load-as-measured-by-Ct where 1,000 times higher against delta than against original Wuhan strain data from the pandemic when measured at the onset of symptomology (so not peak data, not average data, and compared against the earliest PCR results against the original pre-D614G virus). That quietly disappeared from scientific discussions, but the media keeps on citing it as the truth without any qualifications.

We know that vaccination reduced actual transmission and attack rates against Alpha and its very likely that it does the same against Delta. No data has contradicted that yet.

And I can't explain why so many scientists are so eager to undermine the message of vaccine efficacy. I guess they think it'll be easier to get vaccinated people to mask up than it is to get the unvaccinated to get vaccinated, and some of them are presumably just as addicted to bad news on facebook and twitter as the rest of the population is.


Ok thanks, that is informative. From a policy perspective I think it is a bad idea to basically promise everything can return to normal after vaccination, if this appears to not have worked out in places like Israel. In Germany they are phasing out free antigen tests and they are not required for vaccinated. Both seem like really short-sighted policies.


It seems like lately there's been a big push for people to respond to the disappointing outcomes for the vaccines in places like Israel and Iceland with "Simpson's paradox!" or "base rate fallacy!" as a way of ignoring what the actual data is saying. The other day NPR had a segment about Iceland where they said "67% of cases being in vaccinated people might sound like a disappointing number, but you have to remember that 71% of the country is vaccinated" which still seems pretty underwhelming?


What ultimately matters is if the hospitals can handle the load, delta is problematic because it produces new cases more quickly even among vaccinated and a sufficiently large number ends up in the hospital for it to become problematic. Both of these are demonstrated in Israel without invoking any kind of statistical analysis. Qualitatively the vaccine alone does not work well enough to lead to an R0 < 1, even when the most susceptible people are almost all vaccinated. I think that is super disappointing and at the same time I think it is really worrying that some politicians have not got that message in Germany / other places.


> Qualitatively the vaccine alone does not work well enough to lead to an R0 < 1

I honestly haven't seen any evidence of this.

With Alpha the attack rate for 80% of breakthrough infections was zero and the other 20% were only 1-3 cases. That's enough to drive the r0 down below 1.0 in a 100% vaccinated population. Nobody has done similar studies against delta breakthroughs.


Good thing we've had over 18 months since the start of this pandemic to add a significant number of hospital beds and nursing staff to help handle these spikes ...


They've been firing staff and closing beds.


I think beds and staff are repurposed when demand wanes? Closing beds and firing staff could be the interpretation of this but I don't think it shows the whole story.


Expanding on a sibling comment's reference to Simpson's paradox is the following analysis of the data:

https://www.covid-datascience.com/post/israeli-data-how-can-...

Basically, Israel is doing quite well even still. Yes, there's a reduction in efficacy, and yes there's breakthrough infections, but your risk of serious outcomes is still reduced by ~80%+, even in older populations _when correctly compared to unvaccinated older populations_.


Isn't what you ultimately care about in terms of policy the effectiveness on a population level? Of course you hit diminishing returns, when you start vaccinating people that were not at risk in the first place. I'm not arguing against getting the vaccine btw., I'm vaccinated myself. It is just disappointing that it alone won't solve the problem.


The states with the low vaccination rates are now paying the price of their politics.


You think people are buying up Chips designed to go in to Toyota cars?

Surely they're beyond worthless to anyone but the manufacturer and Toyota themselves?


Parent was speaking of the chip shortage in general, which goes way past cars. Car manufacturers will do what they can to isolate themselves from the open market (and buy the numbers and have the political backing to do so), but demand for non-car parts affects allocation of production capacity to their demands too.

> designed to go in to Toyota cars?

Chips rarely are designed for a specific car, and a car will also contain quite a few that are not strictly specific to automotive.


Could have not started the illegal war in the first place...

Could have invaded the actually bloody country responsible for 9/11 instead of a central Asian backwater.

Could have reigned in your massive military industrial complex which essentially demands wars for profits....

What am i kidding... 'MERICA!


Not sure how Reddit is worth that much... Are the 50 power mods in charge of 90% of the top subs selling access to state propaganda departments? Actually don't answer that, its painfully obvious.

$ per user revenue is pathetic compared to most social media platforms.


From the FBI's own definition:

International terrorism : Violent, criminal acts committed by individuals and/or groups who are inspired by, or associated with, designated foreign terrorist organizations or nations (state-sponsored).

Struggling to see how the CIA isn't a terrorist organisation at this point.


The whole history of the US is filled with terrorist activities and violation of human rights. It has overthrown more governments, killed more who politically opposed. The only reason why the US has the slightest thread of anything resembling credibility in the international space, is convenient willful ("diplomatic") ignorance.

Almost every major instability and geopolitical conflict can be traced directly to US involvement and/or weapon deals.

That isn't to say that our world would be rocey without it. Just that, it is the way it is, and pretending otherwise would be puzzling. It's not a secret.

Here is a very small part of it: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_interventions_by_the...


So is every other country's history full of the same. Let's stop acting like the USA is unique in this. I will call out hypocrisy wherever I see it.


Most countries have some dark past, sure, and of course some more than others. But, in terms of consistency, extent and persistence, none come even close to the US. Just look at the Wikipedia article article I linked, and also this one: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_involvement_in...

Just pointing out what is known history shouldn't be considered hypocrisy. Nor did I claim the US was alone in doing "bad stuff". So, I suppose you identify your argument as a straw man?

You are more than welcome to counter argue the actual point, by suggesting a present day contender.


Sure the US has instigated plenty of crap but your comment is hyperbolic to the point of insanity and belittles damn near every regional power on the globe.

People are perfectly capable of starting wars with each other without the help of the US and if these people truly need help getting to the point of shooting each other the US is not the only nation with an intelligence agency capable of helping them out.


I was thinking the idea that the US are “helping people” was debunked since the war in Iraq.


The only way that was first debunked by the war in Iraq would be if people picked up a world history book that started with the war in Iraq. I cannot think of an exception where the US didn't chose their interest over a democratically elected governance.


so the conflicts the US instigated were inevitable, and the US might as well have gotten involved for its own benefit? I hope this is not what you're saying but it sure sounds like it is.


Pretty sure the world would be peaceful, holding hands and singing kumbaya without the US, especially Latin America.


I don't get the struggle. They are and have probably always been a terrorist organisation by anyone's definition.

Seeing how the FBI have been inspiring, training and generally helping out with lawfare operations and "soft"-coups around the globe, they don't have much of an upper hand either!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Condor https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Hemisphere_Institute_f...

https://theintercept.com/2019/06/09/brazil-archive-operation... https://nacla.org/news/2019/07/01/lawfare-unmasked-brazil https://www.brasilwire.com/folha-brazilian-lawmakers-fbi-and... https://www.brasilwire.com/how-fbi-controlled-operation-topp...


The common definition of terrorism conveniently explicitly excludes governmental activity.


I wonder who thought that up?


That's a pretty poor definition, but many common ones are. For me the key component of terrorism is the terror part, it's the use of violence to intimidate a population.

So for example if you are targeting specific people or organisations, or infrastructure as targets due to their activities or capabilities then the goal is functional. You are trying to destroy or damage an asset or capability, any intimidation is incidental. Terrorism is where it's the fear itself that's the weapon.

Yep, that does mean some governmental operations count. Shock and Awe comes dangerously close, if the intended target of the S&A is a civilian population.


Because it's not designated as one, duh.


Someone should really look in to that....


If that were true then the entire education industry globally is a scam which i simply can't believe.

Have you never had a great lecturer who can deliver information in a way which makes more sense to you then just reading it off a website?


I have, but the chance of getting that when you pay for an education is low enough for it to be an anomaly in my experience.


That's not what teachers and tutors are for. The personal human interaction motivates you to do work that you wouldn't bother to otherwise. Some schools even call them "facilitators" or some other word to remind you they're not just a firehose of facts.


Why would I want an education in something I’m not motivated to do past, say, high school?


Online Education industry is a scam in India - high fees ($500-$1500 range) along with low wage mediocre teachers!


That makes it a high margin business, not a scam.


Religion plays very little role in English politics.

I doubt many people in North East Somerset considered this mans faith before voting for him.


If you live in a modern western country? Nothing.

The asparagus season might be a few weeks shorter, you may pay 3-5% more but ultimately no one is going to starve.

The best thing to do is prepare for slightly higher outgoings.

If you are in Sub-Saharan Africa continue doing what you're already doing, get on a dinghy and point it at Europe.


98% of the land that makes up the wheat crop in the US is currently in severe drought. I’ve seen farmers showing land that normally would have wheat 4’ high being 8” high. If wheat fails to this degree, we have a bigger issue on our hands than paying 3-5% more for asparagus.


Been hearing this for decades. Being in an extreme drought for 35+, maybe it’s time to rethink what is normal and what is extreme


You don't, you hold the dumb, over priced stock as a reminder for future, better informed investing.


I love seeing these issues reverberate around the internet.

This time i think /r/sysadmin pegged the issue first, great sub.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: